Hardly strange. Latin was the language used by educated men and women across Europe to communicate with each other for centuries. It is, of course, also widely used by the Roman Catholic church worldwide despite modern moves to local languages.
@@timhayes8117 We actually know a lot. We know about syllable length and vowels and stress due to poetry, for example. We also know a lot because of how modern Romance languages (and their dialects) sound -- we can work backwards to what it must have sounded like previously. And we know a lot because there were plenty of Latin teachers who wrote down what it should sound like -- there were self-help books for people from the provinces and people who weren't native speakers, so they could improve their Latin to get ahead in society... yes, really! Therefore, we absolutely, positively, know that the Italians mispronounce their Latin.
So beautiful...... . Acoustics within the concert hall: Magnificent. Thank you
Wat a magnificent piece of work..
Very rich sound....wow
I have loved this beautiful music most of my life. It still moves me!
THE BEST SO FAR I EVER HAD WHATCHED AND EXPERIENCED. JUST AS I LEARNED WHEN GRADUATED..!
Enormous sound field. So beautiful sound !
Stark dieses Lied: Gaudeamus igitur !
In dem Ambiente muss das wunderschön geklungen haben.
Grosse !!!
Акустика отличная.
Jeeze, it seems like this should have alot more likes!
Non plus ultra! Vivat!
God Bless You My dear children .You are our children And after Young lady
❤❤❤❤❤
❤
Majestic
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Maravilloso!!!!!
Божественная латынь!
Beautiful song
Bravo !
Супер
Whats the title
Wundervoll aber zu gegeben ein Männer Chor ist bei dem Lied einfach perfekt
Super3😂
.Basilica di Santa Croce
ร้องด้วยคำร้องภาษาละติน มีความขลัง เหมือน สวดมนต์ด้วยภาษาบาลี
Indah sekali dalam ruangan besar
Put your cameras away and enjoy the choir
Они слова выучить не могли!?
Strange linguage
@Mihaela Jivcovici mi no speak Latina.You speak Latina ?
Hardly strange. Latin was the language used by educated men and women across Europe to communicate with each other for centuries. It is, of course, also widely used by the Roman Catholic church worldwide despite modern moves to local languages.
@@lindsayolh but they pronounce it wrong, because they're Italians and they confuse it with their own language.
@@misterm7225 How do you know how it should be pronounced. It has not been used as a living language since the Romans.
@@timhayes8117 We actually know a lot. We know about syllable length and vowels and stress due to poetry, for example. We also know a lot because of how modern Romance languages (and their dialects) sound -- we can work backwards to what it must have sounded like previously. And we know a lot because there were plenty of Latin teachers who wrote down what it should sound like -- there were self-help books for people from the provinces and people who weren't native speakers, so they could improve their Latin to get ahead in society... yes, really!
Therefore, we absolutely, positively, know that the Italians mispronounce their Latin.